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Re: [Xen-devel] Legacy PCI interrupt {de}assertion count



On 31/03/17 16:38, Konrad Rzeszutek Wilk wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 04:46:27AM -0600, Jan Beulich wrote:
>>>>> On 31.03.17 at 10:07, <roger.pau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> On Fri, Mar 31, 2017 at 05:05:44AM +0000, Tian, Kevin wrote:
>>>>> From: Jan Beulich [mailto:JBeulich@xxxxxxxx]
>>>>> Sent: Monday, March 27, 2017 4:00 PM
>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On 24.03.17 at 17:54, <roger.pau@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>>>>> As I understand it, for level triggered legacy PCI interrupts Xen sets
>>>>>> up a timer in order to perform the EOI if the guest takes too long in
>>>>>> deasserting the line. This is done in pt_irq_time_out. What I don't
>>>>>> understand is why this function also does a deassertion of the guest view
>>>>> of the PCI interrupt, ie:
>>>>>> why it calls hvm_pci_intx_deassert. This AFAICT will clear the pending
>>>>>> assert in the guest, and thus the guest will end up loosing one 
>>>>>> interrupt.
>>>>>
>>>>> Especially with the comment next to the respective set_timer() it looks 
>>>>> to me
>>>>> as if this was the intended effect: If the guest didn't care to at least 
>>>>> start
>>>>> handling the interrupt within PT_IRQ_TIME_OUT, we want it look to be lost 
>>>>> in
>>>>> order to not have it block other interrupts inside the guest (i.e. 
>>>>> there's more
>>>>> to it than just guarding the host here).
>>>>>
>>>>> "Luckily" commit 0f843ba00c ("vt-d: Allow pass-through of shared
>>>>> interrupts") introducing this has no description at all. Let's see if 
>>>>> Kevin
>>>>> remembers any further details ...
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Sorry I don't remember more detail other than existing comments.
>>>> Roger, did you encounter a problem now?
>>>
>>> No, I didn't encounter any problems with this so far, any well behaved guest
>>> will deassert those lines anyway, it just seems to be against the spec.  
>>> AFAIK
>>> on bare metal the line will be asserted until the OS deasserts it, so I was
>>> wondering if this was some kind of workaround?
>>
>> "OS deasserts" is a term I don't understand. Aiui it's the origin device
>> which would need to de-assert its interrupt, and I think it is not
>> uncommon for devices to de-assert interrupts after a certain amount
>> of time. If that wasn't the case, spurious interrupts could never occur.
> 
> I recall Sander (CC-ed) here hitting this at some point. There was some device
> he had (legacy?) that would very much hit this path.
> 
> But I can't recall the details, sorry.
> 
> Sanders, it was in the context of the dpci softirq work I did if that helps.

Hi Konrad,

You mean these ?

The issue leading up to this revert for xen-4.5: 
https://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2015-01/msg01025.html

Where this seems to be the thread that started the conversation leading up to 
that revert: 
https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2014-11/msg01330.html

Which than for xen-4.6 continued in a thread with the subject "dpci: Put the 
dpci back on the list if scheduled from another CPU."
which is spread out over several months, (this is somewhere in between 
https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2015-03/msg02102.html ).

--
Sander

>>
>> Jan
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Xen-devel mailing list
>> Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> https://lists.xen.org/xen-devel


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